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Feeding Strategy (New ed)

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Feeding is invoked in some way in almost all the encounters and associations between different species.

The choice of food is immense: plants grow in a multitude of forms, from seaweeds to cactuses and from grasses to forest trees: animal prey is available from tiny krill in the oceans to antelopes on the plains.

As almost every species is accessible to another with the right feeding strategy, there is a continual evolutionary jostling between eater and eaten for the advantage over the other.

Among both plants and animals elaborate strategies have evolved for exploring the surrounding life as food.

The feeding behavior of predators is based on a search and strike strategy.

In contrast, grazers live surrounded by their food and are relatively immobile.

Such animals as impalas and grasshoppers, whose persistent feeding make them ready prey, have evolved means of avoiding the notice of predators or methods of speedy escape.

Plants that digest animal tissue have evolved complex and devious means to attract prey.

The variations in style of these feeding encounters and the precision involved in some of the feeding mechanisms are the themes of Feeding Strategy.

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Product Details
University of Chicago Press
0226641864 / 9780226641867
Paperback / softback
591.53
01/08/1982
United States
158 pages
150 x 250 mm, 452 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More